Racing GAMbit, LLC v. State Horse Racing Commission

184 A.3d 192
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 9, 2018
Docket415 C.D. 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 184 A.3d 192 (Racing GAMbit, LLC v. State Horse Racing Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Racing GAMbit, LLC v. State Horse Racing Commission, 184 A.3d 192 (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON

Racing GAMbit, LLC (Petitioner) petitions for review of an adjudication and order of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Agriculture, State Horse Racing Commission (Commission), dated February 28, 2017, which reversed a Board of Stewards (Stewards) decision to not disqualify Petitioner's horse, Cousin Stephen, from the fifth race at Philadelphia PARX (PARX) on September 25, 2016. For the reasons discussed below, we reverse.

On August 31, 2016, Petitioner acquired Cousin Stephen in a claiming race 1 at Saratoga Race Course in New York. Pursuant to a New York Gaming Commission regulation, a claimed horse "shall not race outside New York State for a period of 30 days from the date of the claim or the end of the meeting at which it was claimed, whichever period of time is longer." N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 9, § 4038.4 . When such a restriction applies to a horse, the horse is referred to as being "in jail." (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 41a.) The meeting at Saratoga ended on September 4, 2016, thereby placing Cousin Stephen in jail until October 4, 2016.

Petitioner entered Cousin Stephen in the September 25, 2016 race at PARX. The official PARX race program listed the August 31, 2016 claiming race as Cousin Stephen's last race. ( Id. at 67a.) Cousin Stephen ran in the race and finished first. ( Id. at 40a.) Richie's Rich, a horse owned by Martin Shaw (Shaw), finished second. ( Id. ) The Stewards received no protests or challenges to Cousin Stephen's eligibility prior to making the results of the race official. ( Id. at 40a-41a.)

On October 6, 2016, Shaw contacted Jonathan S. Gerweck (Gerweck), Chief Steward at PARX. ( Id. at 40a.) Shaw questioned Cousin Stephen's eligibility to run in the race, contending that the Stewards should have disqualified Cousin Stephen due to being in jail. ( Id. ) Gerweck informed Shaw that the Stewards did not disqualify Cousin Stephen because they had not received a timely protest of his eligibility. ( Id. at 41a.)

On October 11, 2016, Shaw appealed the Stewards decision to the Commission. ( Id. at 7a-8a, 47a, 95a.) On October 12, 2016, the Commission granted the appeal and further granted a supersedeas on the race results. ( Id. at 11a.) By notice dated November 14, 2016, the Commission informed Robert Reid (Reid), Petitioner's horse trainer, of an upcoming hearing on the matter. 2 ( Id. at 17a.) This notice instructed Reid to inform Petitioner of the hearing. ( Id. ) The Commission held the hearing on December 8, 2016. Neither Reid nor Petitioner attended. Shaw and Gerweck testified as the only witnesses.

Gerweck testified that Shaw called him over a week after the conclusion of the race and asked why the Stewards did not disqualify Cousin Stephen. ( Id. at 40a.) Gerweck informed Shaw that the Stewards did not disqualify Cousin Stephen because they did not receive a timely protest, as required by 58 Pa. Code § 163.281 (c). 3 ( Id. at 41a, 95a.)

Shaw testified that he did not learn of Cousin Stephen's ineligibility until over a week after the race. ( Id. at 50a.) Upon learning this information, Shaw called the New York Gaming Commission to confirm. ( Id. ) The New York Gaming Commission confirmed to Shaw that it fined Reid for entering an ineligible horse. ( Id. ) In support of this fact, Shaw entered into evidence a printout of the New York Gaming Commission's ruling, wherein it fined Reid "for having run horse Cousin Stephen at P[ARX] Racetrack on September 25, 2016." ( Id. at 10a.) Shaw opined that the racing office should have prevented Cousin Stephen from entering the race as ineligible. ( Id. at 54a.)

By adjudication and order dated February 28, 2017, the Commission granted Shaw's appeal and disqualified Cousin Stephen from the race. ( Id. at 104a.) The Commission further ordered the winnings to be redistributed according to the revised order of finish. ( Id. ) The Commission found that Cousin Stephen's "in jail" status rendered the horse ineligible to compete in the race. ( Id. at 94a.) Accordingly, the Commission concluded that Cousin Stephen's running in the race violated 58 Pa. Code § 163.108 , which requires that a horse shall be eligible at the time of the race in order to compete. ( Id. at 96a.)

The Commission conceded that Shaw did not file a timely protest of Cousin Stephen's eligibility. ( Id. at 95a.) Notwithstanding Shaw's lack of a timely protest, the Commission nonetheless concluded that it must disqualify Cousin Stephen pursuant to 58 Pa. Code § 161.1 , which imposes a duty to "prevent circumvention or evasion of the Commission's rules and regulations." ( Id. at 97a.)

In support of its conclusion, the Commission discussed a 2015 Commission adjudication, Romar, LLC v. State Horse Racing Commission ( Romar ), Docket No. HORSE-2014-11 (issued May 26, 2015). In Romar , the stewards received an untimely verbal protest regarding the eligibility of Romar's horse, Wardelle. ( Id. at 112a, 123a.) The protest challenged Wardelle's eligibility to run in the race. ( Id. at 125a.) The stewards denied the protest as untimely, but proceeded to conduct an independent investigation into the matter. ( Id. at 126a.) The stewards ultimately declared Wardelle ineligible due to being in jail. ( Id. at 122a.) Accordingly, the stewards issued a formal ruling disqualifying Wardelle. ( Id. ) Romar timely appealed the ruling to the Commission. ( Id. at 119a.) The Commission affirmed the stewards' ruling, concluding that the stewards did not exceed their authority in investigating Wardelle's eligibility and disqualifying the horse based upon the results of that investigation. ( Id. at 126a-27a.) In so doing, the Commission noted the untimeliness of the protest but ultimately determined that the stewards' power under 58 Pa. Code § 165.201 4 imposed an obligation to investigate the allegation of ineligibility. ( Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 A.3d 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/racing-gambit-llc-v-state-horse-racing-commission-pacommwct-2018.